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The Pharmakon of Shame
Read more: The Pharmakon of ShameSéan Kennedy and Joseph Valente, editors of Irish Shame, explore the intricate relationship between empathy and shame in this blog.
A Celebratory Issue of ‘The New Americanist’

by Matthew Chambers The text for this blog is taken from the Editor’s Introduction of The New Americanist Vol 2.2.…
Making art is messy

by Simon Ellis Making art is messy. Artists make lots of decisions under less-than-ideal conditions without a clear understanding of…
Edinburgh University Press – 75th Anniversary

by Nicola Ramsey 2024 is a milestone year for Edinburgh University Press as we celebrate 75 years of books, journals…
Yogic Yeats and Jung: Early European Receptions of Asian Meditation Manuals

by Chris Murray Should Europeans meditate? Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) said not, but William Butler Yeats (1865-1939) disagreed. To argue…
Astrophil and Stella: The Sidney-Jonson Connection

by Bob Evans In 2023, the Ben Jonson Journal celebrated its thirtieth anniversary with a special issue devoted to detailed…
Mine Games: Humanitarian Mine Action and The HALO Trust

by Angus Mitchell In January 1997, Diana, Princess of Wales, undertook a trip to Angola on behalf of the International…
Lost Property at the British Museum

by Sarah Keenan It’s easy to get lost at the British Museum. The expansive central London building, set out over…
Perspectives from Beyond Scotland’s Borders: Nurturing Innovative, Global Scholarship on Scottish History and Culture for Half a Century

by Kevin James and Melissa Turner Scotland has always had a geographically expansive range of global engagements: its imprint is…
How colonial violence in Tasmania helped build scientists’ reputations and prestigious museum collections

by Jack Ashby, University of Cambridge Readers are advised this article contains the names of Aboriginal people who have died,…